CeBIT 2011 10

Two Windows tablets were on offer from MSI at CeBIT this year in the shape of the Windpad 100W and Windpad 110W. Both running Windows 7 Home Premium edition, the main physical differences come in the shape of hardware buttons...

The Windpad 100A, MSI's Android-based answer to the iPad, has been knocking around for some time, but until now getting a fix on its specs has been quite difficult. MSI lifted the cover on the tablet at CeBIT 2011 this...

Click here for more images of the Ford SYNC system Car giants Ford took this week's CeBIT technology expo in Hanover, Germany, as an opportunity to announce the global launch of their new connected dashboard system, SYNC. Already available...

Fujitsu are the latest company to show their tablet hand here at CeBIT 2011 in Hanover, Germany, showcasing the Windows 7 touting Stylistic Q550 at their booth. A 10.1 inch capacitive touch slate, it's still very much a work-in-progress, with...

Among the many Android Honeycomb tablets ASUS have been displaying at CeBIT this week is the Eee Pad Slider. Seemingly a bog-standard Android tablet, a little lip on the edge of the slate lifts up to release a hinge, revealing...

Mouse control is passé, let's face it, so it's good the alternative is waiting for us: eye control. Swedish company Tobii Technology has developed a tracking technology that means the computer will be able to follow the movements of...

ASUS have had a strong tablet showing at CeBIT this year, with their entire range on display at the show. Perhaps the most impressive of all was the ASUS Eee Pad Transformer. We give it a quick play in the...

CeBIT may be more of an information and communications technologies showcase rather than a consumer focussed show, but that doesn't mean there aren't any wacky design concepts on show. Pick of the pile is the ASUS Iris gear. They're calling...

Powerline networking is becoming an ever-more convenient way to manage a consistent connection to the internet at home without having unsightly Ethernet cables running along the walls, utilising the electrical wiring of your house to throw data around instead....

If there's one unifying factor between all current desktop displays, it's that they need some sort of wired power connection before the screen will fire up. That may not be the case for much longer however, as Fujitsu showed off...